Before she could finish, the woman in the navy coat stepped forward. “You must be Junie’s mother,” she said quietly. “I’m Suzanne. We… we need to talk.”
I stared at her, my fury and fear fighting for space.
“How long have you known, Suzanne?”
“What are you doing here?”
Her face crumpled. “Two years. Lizzy needed blood after an accident, and my husband and I weren’t matches. I started digging. I found the altered record.”
“Two years,” I repeated. “You had two years to knock on my door.”
“I know.”
“No. You had two years to stop being afraid, and you chose yourself every single day.”
Suzanne flinched. “I confronted Marla. She begged me not to tell. And I let her. I told myself I was protecting Lizzy, but I was protecting myself. Marla comes around sometimes.”
My throat burned. “While I buried my daughter in my head every night.”
“I found the altered record.”
Suzanne’s eyes filled. “Yes. And my fear cost you your daughter.”
I turned to Marla, my voice thick with anger. “You took my daughter from me.”
Her lower lip shook. “It was chaos, Phoebe. I made a mistake. And instead of fixing it, I lied. I’m sorry. I am so, so sorry.”
We stood in the morning sun, the truth between us at last, with witnesses all around and nothing left to hide.
My vision blurred. “You let me mourn my child for six years. And you let me do it while she was alive.”
Suzanne stepped closer, her face twisting in pain. “I love her. I’m not her mother, not really, but I couldn’t let go. I’m sorry, Phoebe. I’m so, so sorry.”
“You took my daughter from me.”
I didn’t know what to do with her grief. But it did nothing to excuse what she’d done.
For a long moment, no one spoke. The sounds of the schoolyard faded, and all I could see was the last six years:
Junie’s second birthday, me, in the kitchen late at night, icing one cake and then freezing, hand trembling as I remembered there was supposed to be two.
Or Junie at four, sleeping with her cheek against the pillow, sunlight in her curls, Michael already gone, and me standing over her, asking the dark, “Do you dream about your sister, too?”
I didn’t know what to do with her grief.
A teacher’s voice snapped me back. “Is everything alright here?”
Parents had started staring. Even the front-office secretary had stepped outside.
I straightened. “No. And I want the principal here right now.”
***
The days after were a blur of meetings, phone calls, lawyers, and counselors. I sat in the principal’s office while a district officer took statements. By noon, Marla had been reported. Within days, the hospital opened an investigation.
I still woke up reaching for grief out of habit, even after the truth came.
“Is everything alright here?”
One afternoon, in a sunlit room, I sat across from Suzanne. Junie and Lizzy were on the floor, building a tower of blocks, their laughter rising in bright, impossible harmony.
Suzanne looked at me, her eyes swollen and raw. “Do you hate me?” she asked.
I swallowed. “I hate what you did, Suzanne. I hate that you knew and stayed silent. But I see that you love her, and it’s the only thing that makes this bearable. You had two years to tell me. I had six years to grieve.”
She nodded, tears streaking her cheeks. “If there’s any way, any way possible, we can do this together?”
I glanced at the girls, reaching over each other as they played with a dollhouse. “They’re sisters. That’s never changing again.”
“Do you hate me?”
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